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IMG 1682 EM: Im a person first and a mother second.

Em Rusciano

 

by EM RUSCIANO

“Here she is! Miss Party Animal 2012. Do you even remember what your children look like?”

Yes, that was the opening line from one of my husband’s relatives upon my arrival at a family function on Sunday. It didn’t stop there….

“You have a better gay life than I do.”

“Why don’t you ever wear pants when you go out?”

“I saw you dressed as Rihanna one weekend and then Britney last night.”

“Have you forgotten your husband and children? Here they are, how about I introduce you to them.”

Facebook has a lot to answer for. I see these people once a year. I usually get along with them very well. When two of them requested my friendship on Facebook I of course accepted. I had no idea they would be keeping very close tabs on my social activities and drawing incorrect conclusions about my parenting.

I had my first child when I was 21. From there I was on Australian Idol, moved two states, hosted breakfast radio, got married, bought a house, had another baby – cue post natal depression, quit said radio job, sold my house and moved back home to Melbourne.

Em Rusciano 290x385 EM: Im a person first and a mother second.

Em Rusciano

Before all that, I had been training six days a week for athletics. So yes. It’s fair to say I have been letting my hair down and then some over the past few months. Also, my children are past the newborn/toddler stage and I no longer feel the need to be by their side 24/7.

I’m home with the girls every morning before school. I partake in fairy dancing, music class, circus, little athletics, making school lunches, blah blah blah. I only work each day between 12-4:30. I feed them vegetab… WHY AM I JUSTIFYING MYSELF RIGHT NOW?!! I could delete the last paragraph but I am going to leave it, in case one of the in-laws reads this.

After those Facebook ‘friends’ had finished with the verbal attacks I found myself floundering, trying to explain that I only post things on Facebook that are mildly interesting. I don’t bother with status updates like: “I am home with the kids today as I am most days. We have watched Barbie Fashion Fairytale six times in a row and now I’ll clean up the bathroom and think about dinner.”

It’s true, when my friends and I go out we get dressed up. Yes, we may take it a little further than most but how does my love of sequins and feathers equate to me neglecting my family? Just because I go harder than most, because I choose not to wear an ill-fitting lycra dress, unfortunate white shoes and inappropriate underwear, this somehow means I’m an absent mother and wife?

Here are some of the “offending” shots from facebook:

Em R EM: Im a person first and a mother second.

Em Rusciano

 

To be honest, I don’t really have many friends with kids. I only know a handful of other mothers as I find it hard to bond with the 40-yr-old plus mums at my daughter’s school. They are lovely people but our lives and interests are very different.

Her best friend’s father is 50, my own father is in his 50s. I am not really sure what the “norm” is in terms of socialising for people with children. Perhaps compared to other mothers I do go out a lot… (1-2 times a week) I have just never accepted that having children should put an end to who you are as a person and the things you enjoy doing.

em 3 380x380 EM: Im a person first and a mother second.

Em Rusciano

Here is a controversial statement:

I don’t live for my kids.

I would happily lay down my life for them or cough up a kidney should one of them require it – but I do not consider myself a mother first and a person second.

If you do, great. This is not an attack on you nor am I saying my way is the right one. I’m simply stating that I am a lady human who happens to have spawned – move on, nothing else to see here.

For a while I thought that meant I was disconnected and maybe even, dare I say it – a bad mother because I refused to hand over my very being to my small people.

I am Em. I enjoy Nutella, eating in the shower and Tina Fey. I own 32 pairs of leggings, over 200 pairs of shoes and collect owl figurines. I’m also a Mother.

I think I’m a good Mum. They know that wearing white pants is not acceptable for anyone. They don’t see why gay people can’t get married, they both detest Justin Bieber, they have never eaten fast food, they don’t litter are kind to animals and only swear for effect.

I am led to believe a lot of stressed mothers finish the week with a large bottle of wine at home. I just choose to do that in a leotard, covered in glitter on a podium surrounded by gay men.

Have a festive week.

E x

Em Rusciano is the host of Mamamia Today on Austereo (which you should be tuning into at 3pm every weekday because it’s ace) and regularly appears on Network Ten’s ’The Project’. You should follow her on Twitter here and take a look at her website here.

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166 Comments so far

  1. Zoe

    You are awesome. I was raised by someone who was a person first, and a mother second, and I turned out normal, happy, balanced and if I can say: successful. I also know what it is to be independent and understand the importance of looking after yourself (ie. having fun). I will too be a mother second – but a good one!

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  2. JayBee

    I love this! I have many friends who say ‘my kids are my life’ I say ‘my kids are PART of my life’…. I adore my children and my hubby but it is so blissful to go out with friends and just be me not just Mum…Getting one person ready, go home when I want to, Order a meal for one…don’t mind if i do! Love your work Em x

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  3. KatLizzy

    Top work Em.
    I am single, 30 years old and in no way maternal.
    For 5 years I lived in a very small country town and made some wonderful girlfriends. During this time I attended engagement parties, hens nights and bridal showers (ergh). Then the babies started arriving.
    It was as if someone had offered up mass lobotomies. Their lives revolved around thei children. I then moved to a larger town about 90 minutes away.
    Not one came to visit me in the 18 months I lived there. It was “all too hard”.
    I’ve now moved 3.5 hours away and don’t think I will see any of them again (unless it is a complete coincidence).
    I know not all mums are like this, and I have one friend who has a deal with her husband where she stays at home all week, and if she wants to go out on a Saturday night, she can. Their child is 11 months old.

    Glitter on Em, glitter on.

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    • Kitten

      We have the same friends. I love them, but I miss the person hiding inside the (wonderful) mother.

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  4. Dj69

    Every time someone say to me “hey no need to ask you what youve been up to lately, I’ve already read it all on Facebook” I block updates to them :) now they’ll have something to discuss with me at our next catch up! :) keep having fun! Life’s short!

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  5. Melissa P

    As a fellow lady human and mother I am loving this too much! Love your work.

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  6. Really

    Em, quite simply YOU ROCK.

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  7. Freyja

    Count me in as a person who has a rather colourful life and three kids…..they would be unnerved if I started acting all mainstream. The real me is all they know…..and love.

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  8. Serena

    I totally agree with you Em. I live by the motto that to be the best mum i need to be i have to take time for myself. Even if its just reading a book at the end of the night.

    I have a great group of mums who all have kids around the same age as my daughter (we met at antenatal classes). We try to have 3 or 4 nights out a year with just us mums, and we either go out for dinner or to the movies.

    I also take time to spend with my hubby and we try to have a date night a couple of times a month and send our daughter over to her grandparents house, she loves it and always comes back happy.

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  9. J

    I just wonder how old these people are that make the comments ‘you shouldn’t be going out, you’re a mother!’ etc – anyone see a particular age group/generation coming through there?? Thankfully times are a changin’ and hopefully by the time I have kids (not far away) people won’t be so judgmental! And even if they are – my response will always be ‘why not?’. That usually showcases their irrational thinking :)

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  10. Alice

    Love this! My mum is my hero because I know what an amazing PERSON she is – not just what an amazing mum she is. She was a role model that you can be an attentive, kind, caring mum who also has a killer career, is highly intelligent, hilariously funny and looks like a movie star. Being a mother shouldn’t mean throwing away your make up and wearing flats every day, if that’s not who you are. No child wants a ghost for a mother, they want a role model.

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  11. nic

    I find it a big reflection on society that perhaps a lot of husbands/partners out there will go out with their friends, go to the pub, stay out after work or even go away on trips and never get questioned on it. It seems that there is expectation that men are people first then fathers yet so much judgement is placeed on the mother. How many men give up years of their lives; going out with their friends, looking after the children while their wives play their sports and use their outlets of leisure. I would say the numbers are far too unbalanced

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    • Anonymous

      I agree! My bf made a comment recently about how crap he thought it was that his friend was only “allowed” to go out drinking once a week, and how controlling that makes his wife (the mother of his two young children). My question back was how many times per week his friend agreed to stay home with the kids while she goes partying.

      Maybe the view is that women are more physically tied to the children (via breastfeeding, etc) so there’s the assumption that they have to be at home, whereas the dads have no (medical) physical necessity, so they can ‘choose’ when to be there?

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  12. Alice

    Haha fan-bloody-tastic!

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  13. Angela Tran

    Hi Em,

    I’ve loved you since Em and Wippa, I went through a ‘post em leaving to Melbourne’ depression and radio has never been the same since. Since I heard you on mamamia that is. I knew you’d make it and now it’s airing in perth so that your former bosses can know what they’ve missed out on. You probably won’t even get this far down in the comments section but I’ve wanted to express to you how much respect I have for you. You say what I’ve thought of but haven’t put to words, you empower me to believe what I think is right and that being a woman is wonderful, beautiful. I am getting married at the end of this year and like you I find the in laws a handful ( handful of judgements!) I can feel their hands on my neck and as the day comes nearer their clench is tightening. I’ve started to question myself why am I not fitting to what they want? Why didn’t I come out like a cake from a mould? hearing you today has made me feel YES! What I think is not wrong it’s just a different right. Thank you em, thanks for coming on radio again, thanks for sharing your experiences. I appreciate you.

    Have a wonderful day,

    Angela

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  14. swishmusic

    LOVE THIS ARTICLE! I am trying to love every second of my beautiful children’s lives but to be honest I also can’t wait til I am past the nappy/screaming stage so I can finally spend a day without at some point having excrement on my hands and rediscover what it is like to be ME! Who is that person again? :-) Not to mention having time to work on a relationship with my husband!

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  15. sparkie

    more power to you Em!

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  16. Ali C

    More power to you Em, but what I want to know is who looks after your kids when you’re out?
    I’d love to have this attitude but someone has to stay at home with the rug rats and as far as I can see there isn’t anyone volunteering.

    People are forever saying on here stuff like “you need a date night to keep you sane”, or “you need time for yourself”, I would love to know how people pull this off because it seems downright impossible from where I’m standing knee deep in nappies & toilet training.

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    • emrusciano

      Hi Ali,

      My husband is a cyclist who goes to bed at 8:30 most nights. I tuck them all in then head out. If he can’t we have 6 Grandparents who step in, or my sister or my best friend Lollie. Stuff date night babe, hand the children over to their Father/trusted adult and get out. I mean it. GET OUT! I want you to report back to me when you’ve done it. THIS WEEKEND. I mean it lady. You are the sun of the family and if the sun is broken, shit breaks.

      Em xx

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      • lucinda

        A friend told me a story last night about a couple she knows with school aged children. She and her husband took two weeks holiday – she spent the first at home with the kids while he went overseas, then he stayed home the second week while she went overseas! Not for everyone, but great idea!

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      • Ali C

        I see my problem, Grandparents not so keen. No siblings without their own kids, best friend also 3 kids.
        My husband does go to bed early, occasionally I get out for a trivia night (wild aren’t I?!?)
        Perhaps I just need to wait for them to get a bit older.
        I would take up your challenge of going out this weekend Em, but I sprained the ankle at Netball (wild again – I know). So mught have to settle for a Tupperware party LOL.
        Please tell me you will be going some sparkle for me though & I’ll jsut watch with envy on Twitter!!

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      • Horizon

        Love your life Em but as a single mum, no can do.

        I feel like motherhood has kind of stolen me away from life.
        I have Cyndi Lauper’s song in my head sometimes. I know, not super intellectual and it has nothing to do with being a mother but it makes me think about things.

        “Some boys take a beautiful girl
        And hide her away from the rest of the world
        I want to be the one to walk in the sun
        Oh girls they want to have fun”

        It’s not to say I resent being a mother, I don’t.
        I mean, don’t we all want to “be the ones to walk in the sun”?
        I know my child wants me to be.

        I have no support from family whatsoever (haven’t spoken to them in years) and my child’s father is too busy with his own lifestyle.
        I went to a gig a few weeks ago on my own (the first night out without my child in 3yrs) and it took about 3mnths to prepare and budget for.
        My child’s paternal grandmother babysat for me for the first time (my child is 7).

        I love my kiddo but the isolation is shit especially if you are a creative free soul. I can literally feel myself getting old, anxiety and depression thrive in these surroundings.

        Believe me, if I could GET OUT I would!

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        • Rara

          He will be big enough soon to do sleepovers at friend’s house. Foster friendships with his friend’s mums and you can give and take with each other. This works for me.

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          • Horizon

            Thanks Rara, I’ll try to arrange a play date soon, be more receptive to his friends mums. It just seemed everyone already forged their friendship circles and it’s been a bit of a struggle making mama friends.
            I’ll give it a go and be more pro active though.

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    • my thoughts

      For my night out I leave my 3 kids (1, 3 & 5) at home with their dad. We have a deal that Friday night is our night to go out with mates & whoever blocks the date first gets a night off duty. He uses this less than me & I get the same comments as Em from his family.
      We have a babysitting swap with friends for our date night. I go to her house & watch her kids while they go out & then she returns the favour so that my partner & I get a date night. We have at least one date a month with the bonus of no babysitting fees.

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      • Sally

        I like this idea muchly!

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  17. Amazon

    Thanks for reminding me that its ok to have a life outside of my child. My family constantly makes remarks like, oh, your going out again?

    I always felt selfish for having a social life but reading this reminds me that its ok to enjoy my life as well as be a mother.

    Love your work!

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  18. MJ

    I love this! This is the first article that has made me remotely interested in having kids.
    Everything else I read and everyone I know makes me feel like never ever ever having children.

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  19. amandajbayley

    I love you Em!!
    I am a mother first, I wish I were a person first…. Perhaps when the kids are both at school full time, I will go out and find myself again! xx

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  20. Justforkicks

    I have only been a mum for a relatively short time and so far I love it! I do however miss the time when I wasn’t obsessed with poo and naptime but as my man is only 6 months, I have faith that that day will come.

    Em to you I say, you go sister. The best gift we can give our kids is happy parents. I have already discovered that the motherhood road is lined with yellow guilt bricks… so tap your ruby red sequin heels together and say “There’s no place like a podium surrounded by gay men”

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  21. Sarah

    Very good!!
    I think you are great – you need to add to your list of talents

    “an excellent writer who is able to tap into exactly what many mums/chicks are thinking and feeling”

    It is very easy for people to judge others for not doing things the way they would do them – cue my mother in my ear – I have fought her all my life.
    You know you love your kids more than anything, you know you are doing a good job, you know they are grounded, happy and safe at all times – even if you are wearing a sequined leotard!!
    Good for you -
    God only knows – if I had your figure you couldnt get me OUT of a leotard!!

    xx

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  22. Anonymous

    Love it!!!

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  23. Little Miss Stella

    Love you moley. As far as I’m concerned youre a tops mum and an even topser chick. Don;t let the outlaws or anyone else get you down. They’re just jealous that they’re nowhere near as fabulous as you. LOVE YOU LONG TIME.

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  24. Sparky

    I would love to get out more but with one parent already working 60+ hours a week (and weekends) and me working part time I need to be the anchor at home for our kids. I go out (just for me) about once a month.

    I am still me and I still persue my interests, I just don’t get to do them child-free and that takes a bit of adjustment.

    PS: Perth radio misses you, Em. Trust me on this.

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  25. amyspeak

    Em, I’ve got one word to sum up my thoughts on the way you choose to live your life: RESPECT.

    You are your own person and I think that being your own person is the best way to live. It’s inspiring (which is a very good thing for your children if you ask me).

    If I were in your shoes at that family gathering I would have had a lot to say to those people giving you a hard time. How dare they judge you based on what you put on Facebook?! Ugh.

    As far as I’m concerned, how you live is fabulous and I hope I can be as good a mum one day. Thanks for sharing part of who you are with us!

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  26. Moi

    well done Em, I don’t have children but if/when I do, I hope to remember this. I think you’re awesome and if i had legs like yours, I wouldn’t wear pants either. Pants are overrated anyway.

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  27. pixiep

    Em good for you! After my daughter was born 10 years ago I did join the Beige Brigade – cropped cargo pants, polo shirt, flat shoes. My wardrobe faded from colourful to flat and lifeless. makeup became a rarity. Then circumstances made me look at my life and I wondered where ‘I’ had gone. I was intelligent, creative, fun, independent but it was all like an old faded photo.
    So I made a decision. I would NOT be part of this mummy-ification. So I ditched the sensible clothes and decided to wear colours or black band tees whichever I felt like, or to wear gorgeous dresses and heels. To dress up leaving the house, even if it’s just the school run. Tracksuit pants are only worn inside, in winter and if I wear beige it’s a fierce beige.
    I accept compliments happily and graciously, I laugh, sing in the car,smile lots and care very little what anyone thinks. That makes the nay-sayers who choose to judge me look like petty sourpusses.
    I listen to music I love, rock, indie, punk. I am very used to liking bands no one else has heard of.
    I do own tupperware, and spend a lot of time cooking but it’s because it’s what I love doing.
    I am not afraid to be myself, be original and be the type of person I want my daughter to be. She became part of our life, we didn’t become part of hers and so she is part of the experiences we have. She has even been to 2 rock concerts (omg you took her with you??)
    I think she is a better person for it!
    I don’t pride myself on being a mother, in fact I rarely ever think of myself that way at all, I am me, and we have a child.
    I pride myself on being a great person and the fact I have a happy husband and a well adjusted, loveable child means I’m doing something right!

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    • tartanskirt

      This is very inspirational! I’ve just returned to work and am finding the mother-in-law not really understanding of my need to work as a way of defining myself outside of motherhood. I think I owe it to my daughter to teach her to be herself and define herself how she wants. I hope I can let go of caring what others think. Now, if only I had a fab sense of fashion I could fall back on…

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  28. Alexandra

    Go Em!

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  29. Miss B

    You know Em, your approach to parenting is, in a nutshell, the same as the French philosophy which was explored in the book French Children Don’t Throw Tantrums.
    The parenting approach there is that it is acceptable, even preferable, for women to not lose their own identity when they become a mother. They advocate still embracing your sexuality, fashion and socialising regularly.
    This book got rave reviews and was heralded as an amazing new parenting philosophy.
    So why then, when someone like Em lives by the same principles is she considered a neglectful mother? Australia’s tall poppy syndrome striking again, perhaps?
    Never mind the critics, Em, just tell them you’re a little bit French, they’ll think you’re well fancy, mate ;-)

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  30. Heidi

    Go Em……………..most women forget what and who they are as soon as they have children, also they start to patronise others who hasn’t had children yet……….go out there and have fun………..show your girls that you can have fun when you are ‘old’…..

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  31. Kaye

    If I looked as good as Em in a fishnet/hotpant combo I would be wearing them EVERY day as well.

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  32. Anon

    My wise Mother has always said to me “when you have children, make sure they fit into your life and not the other way around. You should be a woman first, and a Mum second”.

    Well done for achieving that Em!!

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  33. MrsM

    I wish I had your life Em.

    My life revolved around kids and work with little time leftover for anything else. Friendships got neglected. Now that my kids are independent teens, my husband have time to ourselves but our social life in non-existent. And we;re only in our mid 40s.

    Good on you Em – wish I had this motto 10 years ago.

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  34. Lou

    Love love love this! Good on you, I often feel like there is such a pressure once woman have kids to just be a “mum” and our identities gets taken away abit. I think the best thing about being your own person again and having a social life etc makes for a happier more fulfilled person which makes you a great strong role model and a happier mum

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  35. Lovely lady

    Thank you Em and you are not alone. If a mothers grp was full of chicks like you I’d actually join one and enjoy it.

    I love my son but I need me time and you know what because I can I take it. My son was 2 months old when I went out to celebrate my besties hens, hubby was at home and my mother in laws comment ” how could you don’t you care” my sisters comment ” you can’t wear that your a mother now” all because of fb pics of the night, of course I care but excuse me for being a woman who can still have fun and get away with a strapless top.

    I started work one day a wk when my son was 6 months old, he goes to daycare and loves it and I dress all corporaty and go a full day with no up chuck on my clothes. Too bad the in laws don’t agree we can afford for me not to work so I should be putting mother hood first. Too bad I work more because I enjoy it, I enjoy what I call my intelligent day!!!

    Good on you Em sending my support your way!! Too many woman forget they are not just mothers

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  36. Denise Duffield-Thomas

    Love it Em!

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  37. Anonymous

    “I consider myself a person first and a mother second” – HOORAY!

    I have to ask you Em, have you always felt like that since you became a mum? Or did it take you a little while to realise and think that way?

    Really keen to hear other people’s thoughts on that too. Did anyone regain their ‘own self’ a few years after kids were born….?!

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  38. Belli

    Well said Em! You should not have to justify yourself to your in-law or anyone. You have worked hard to raise your children and create a fantastic life for yourself. No one should be casting judgement on you. Everyone needs time to do the things they love and catch up with friends to maintain their sense of self. How will you offer your kids advice and teach them about life if you don’t have one?

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  39. Kate

    Love this.

    My mum is a mother (who only occasionally remembers she has a husband), and that’s all she is. No work, no hobbies, no proper friends, no life outside of mine. It’s not a good way to be, not for yourself but especially not for your kids. She loves me so much, but I can’t even talk to her about anything because she treats my life, my problems like her own, then magnifies everything with her motherly feelings. A small setback in my life is a tragedy of epic proportions in hers. It’s so tiring, and it makes me feel like I have to live my life for her as well, which is a responsibility I could do without.

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    • hms

      This is my life exactly! Sigh …

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  40. Becstar

    Love this Em. I am a 40 something single mother. I work damn hard to provide a wonderful, loving, safe, nurturing environment for my two boys. Who. Are. Awesome.

    I also head out on my kid free nights/weekends and hit the pubs, clubs, dress ups, birthday parties, gallery openings, lounge room discos at friend’s houses, hang out with gay people, straight people, single people, married people and generally have a rocking good time when I do.

    Rarely do I open a bottle of wine in my trackpants on the couch on a Friday night.

    You’re more likely to find me out sporting false eyelashes, ridiculous shoes and shiny jewellery.

    And I won’t justify either lifestyle to anyone.

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  41. zelicat

    I don’t think it is healthy for a child to be the sole focus of an adult’s life. I think it puts them in a terrible position where they feel overly responsible for the adult’s happiness and satisfaction in life. It can also give them a skewed veiw of their own importance in the world, and the impact of their actions.

    In my opinion, being a person first having (at least some of) your own wishes, desires, and needs met is so important. To be totally subsumed by another beings needs/ wants is not a a sustainable way to live for any length of time.

    Fit your own oxygen mask before helping others.

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    • Anonymous

      It also creates children who become adults who think the world revolves around them.

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  42. Nicole

    Thank you so much for this article! I loved it, I have been going out a lot (once a week) and I love it. When I have my first at 25 i stopped going out a lot and then after my second it continued.

    Now they are older and I can have them babysat without too many dramas I am so much happier in myself because i get to go out with my friends. I dont have huge nights but having a night away from my kids I am getting time to me and it makes me appreciate my family.

    I dont think going out makes you a bad mother at all. In fact there was an image on Facebook the other day ‘there is no way to be a perfect mother, but a million ways to be a great mother’.

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  43. Jose

    They’re just jealous. Hell, I know I’m jealous.

    I want to know how you manage it (not that you shouldn’t just ‘how’?). I only have one kid and both my partner and I dearly miss our nights out. But as we have the same network of friends it never seems fair for one of us to go (and it was always him) and a babysitter costs a bomb (adds $100 to a night easily – at least one that lasts long enough for dancing). I’m waiting for our friends to have kids but until they do there is no shared babysitting. And my mum already does one day during the week so not interested in a regular night as well. Doesn’t your partner get shitty? Or does he go out as well?

    I am completely supportive of a night off a week (or 2). And I agree I’m me first and a mother second. I just can’t juggle the practicalities to get a night out with the girls more than … well once so far this year :(

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    • Louise

      Why can’t your partner/husband stay at home while you go out with your friends? Even if you alternated once a month each (i.e. every fortnight one of you goes out) and then you had a couples night together once a month? Of course I don’t know your relationship dynamics or financial situation but children don’t just fall out of the sky – as my mum always says about men who think they’re doing a good deed by “baby-sitting” their child if you’re responsible enough to create a child you’re responsible enough to take care of one.

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      • Jose

        Hi Louise,

        You are completely right of course. I just need to try harder to actually organise stuff as I get to the weekend and collapse. I guess the truth is that as I work full-time I prioritise time with my daughter over time with my friends. And he does the same thing. We do see people but with a 3yo in tow I can never relax. We’re also a bit broke at the moment which doesn’t help. Still this year I have really stepped out of the baby bubble and recognised how much I miss my friends. Whinge whinge … will try harder in future.

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    • Walking on Sunshine

      Hi Jose,
      Why are you waiting till your friends have kids for shared babysitting?
      Is this the norm for most mums out there?

      I dont have kids but love to babysit my friends little ones.

      I hope when my time does come they will return the favour, but even if that time never comes I still got a fun night with a beautiful bub.

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      • Jose

        Hi Sunshine,

        It’s a really good question, but the truth is I just wuss out. Most of the time we or I would be joining a group going to a gig or something so it seems mean to ask one of them to stay home so I can go. Probably would be easier if we had a better cross-section of friends. Also because we’re the first to have kids there has been a shortage of offers – everyone assumes you have other people to help. I think it can be a real benefit to have siblings for this stuff (and other stuff of course) but as an only child (and with DH’s family interstate) I don’t want to impose.

        I’m sure your friends will return the favour eventually and until then you get super high points for being a great friend!

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  44. appreciate

    THANK YOU!

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  45. angie

    Don’t want to bring in the whole working/no working other debate (coz we all work right!) but I have had that attitude and those kind of comments coz I work part time. It’s ok for the daddy but not for the mummy, huh?
    You go Em, and may I suggest a little bit of FB friend editing?? ;)

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  46. Rachael

    Agree, doesnt make you a bad mum to look after yourself too and to still be a person! What a great role model you are to your children & other young mums

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  47. zara

    thank god someone said it!!!! i totally agree Em! why should your life stop because you have children, if your a happy & relaxed mum that with rub off on the children who will be happy…if that means going out once a week then go for it girl!!!!

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  48. Donsie

    Em, you are so funny. I’m sure you are a wonderful mother but I don’t understand why your kids have never eaten fast food, I guess nobody is perfect:)

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  49. Ellen

    I loved this.
    During my first pregnancy, I was consumed by fear that motherhood would take over my life and steal my identity. On my second night out of hospital after having our baby, my husband surprised me by inviting some of our closest, child-free friends over for dinner and saying “Look, nothing has changed. You fit in just as you did before”. And he was absolutely right. I’ve maintained a vigorous social life, thanks to my wonderful husband who doesn’t see looking after his own kids as “babysitting” and I always come home feeling refreshed, myself and ready to take on parenting with more passion than ever.

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  50. shauna

    good article, lucky you. I am the 40 year old mum, can’t pull of the lycra anymore, but definately some sequins.

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